Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa

Planned obsolescence has become a strategy adopted by large corporations, for products to be produced with surprisingly short useful life spans. These shorter than expected product life spans ensure that consumers make regular repeat purchases of their favorite items. The monopoly of obsolescence of...

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Main Authors: John Amolo, Andrisha Beharry-Ramraj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2016-07-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Online Access:https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7461/PPM_2016_03_Amolo.pdf
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spelling doaj-ae879a86e2844605a085170989112d882020-11-25T01:34:51ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672016-07-0114312313210.21511/ppm.14(3).2016.137461Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South AfricaJohn Amolo0Andrisha Beharry-Ramraj1Dr., Post Doctoral fellow, Graduate School of Business and Leadership, University of KwaZulu NatalDr., Academic and Researcher, the University of KwaZulu-NatalPlanned obsolescence has become a strategy adopted by large corporations, for products to be produced with surprisingly short useful life spans. These shorter than expected product life spans ensure that consumers make regular repeat purchases of their favorite items. The monopoly of obsolescence of products is no longer the producers’ prerogative and this by itself leads to unplanned obsolescence basically led by the consumers choice. This research study looks into consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of their favorite lifestyle brands. This is on the basis that less is known on unplanned obsolescence, which arises from the consumers conduct. This work also investigates why consumers replace products, even though these products are most often still seen as fully functional. This social constructivism study has adopted a quantitative approach through the use of self-administered questionnaires. The 300 participants of the study on which this article is based were selected from the Durban of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa, and were chosen through stratified random sampling. The study was further cross generational, in order to examine how consumers attitudes change as they become older. It was found that despite knowing the truth relating to the phenomenon consumers were willing to remain loyalhttps://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7461/PPM_2016_03_Amolo.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author John Amolo
Andrisha Beharry-Ramraj
spellingShingle John Amolo
Andrisha Beharry-Ramraj
Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa
Problems and Perspectives in Management
author_facet John Amolo
Andrisha Beharry-Ramraj
author_sort John Amolo
title Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa
title_short Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa
title_full Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa
title_fullStr Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in Durban, South Africa
title_sort unplanned obsolescence: consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of lifestyle brands in durban, south africa
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2016-07-01
description Planned obsolescence has become a strategy adopted by large corporations, for products to be produced with surprisingly short useful life spans. These shorter than expected product life spans ensure that consumers make regular repeat purchases of their favorite items. The monopoly of obsolescence of products is no longer the producers’ prerogative and this by itself leads to unplanned obsolescence basically led by the consumers choice. This research study looks into consumer’s attitudes and perceptions of their favorite lifestyle brands. This is on the basis that less is known on unplanned obsolescence, which arises from the consumers conduct. This work also investigates why consumers replace products, even though these products are most often still seen as fully functional. This social constructivism study has adopted a quantitative approach through the use of self-administered questionnaires. The 300 participants of the study on which this article is based were selected from the Durban of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa, and were chosen through stratified random sampling. The study was further cross generational, in order to examine how consumers attitudes change as they become older. It was found that despite knowing the truth relating to the phenomenon consumers were willing to remain loyal
url https://businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/7461/PPM_2016_03_Amolo.pdf
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